Konrad Scheffler, M.Sc.

Universitätsklinikum Hamburg-Eppendorf (UKE)
Sektion für Biomedizinische Bildgebung
Lottestraße 55
2ter Stock, Raum 213
22529 Hamburg
- Postanschrift -

Technische Universität Hamburg (TUHH)
Institut für Biomedizinische Bildgebung
Gebäude E, Raum 4.044
Am Schwarzenberg-Campus 3
21073 Hamburg

Tel.: 040 / 7410 25813
E-Mail: konrad.scheffler(at)tuhh.de
E-Mail: ko.scheffler(at)uke.de

Research Interests

  • Magnetic Particle Imaging
  • Image Reconstruction

Curriculum Vitae

Konrad Scheffler is a PhD student in the group of Tobias Knopp for Biomedical Imaging at the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf and the Hamburg University of Technology. He studied Technomathematics between 2015 and 2021 in Hamburg and graduated with a master's degree thesis on "Enhancing matrix compression using convoluted tensor products of Chebyshev polynomials".

Journal Publications

[191665]
Title: Equilibrium Model With Anisotropy for Model-Based Reconstruction in Magnetic Particle Imaging.
Written by: M. Maass, T. Kluth, C. Droigk, H. Albers, K. Scheffler, A. Mertins, and T. Knopp
in: <em>IEEE Transactions on Computational Imaging</em>. November (2024).
Volume: <strong>10</strong>. Number:
on pages: 1588 - 1601
Chapter:
Editor:
Publisher:
Series:
Address:
Edition:
ISBN:
how published:
Organization:
School:
Institution:
Type:
DOI: 10.1109/TCI.2024.3490381
URL:
ARXIVID:
PMID:

Note: article, openaccess, model-based

Abstract: Magnetic particle imaging is a tracer-based tomographic imaging technique that allows the concentration of magnetic nanoparticles to be determined with high spatio-temporal resolution. To reconstruct an image of the tracer concentration, the magnetization dynamics of the particles must be accurately modeled. A popular ensemble model is based on solving the Fokker-Plank equation, taking into account either Brownian or Néel dynamics. The disadvantage of this model is that it is computationally expensive due to an underlying stiff differential equation. A simplified model is the equilibrium model, which can be evaluated directly but in most relevant cases it suffers from a non-negligible modeling error. In the present work, we investigate an extended version of the equilibrium model that can account for particle anisotropy. We show that this model can be expressed as a series of Bessel functions, which can be truncated based on a predefined accuracy, leading to very short computation times, which are about three orders of magnitude lower than equivalent Fokker-Planck computation times. We investigate the accuracy of the model for 2D Lissajous magnetic particle imaging sequences and show that the difference between the Fokker-Planck and the equilibrium model with anisotropy is sufficiently small so that the latter model can be used for image reconstruction on experimental data with only marginal loss of image quality, even compared to a system matrix-based reconstruction.

Conference Publications

[191665]
Title: Equilibrium Model With Anisotropy for Model-Based Reconstruction in Magnetic Particle Imaging.
Written by: M. Maass, T. Kluth, C. Droigk, H. Albers, K. Scheffler, A. Mertins, and T. Knopp
in: <em>IEEE Transactions on Computational Imaging</em>. November (2024).
Volume: <strong>10</strong>. Number:
on pages: 1588 - 1601
Chapter:
Editor:
Publisher:
Series:
Address:
Edition:
ISBN:
how published:
Organization:
School:
Institution:
Type:
DOI: 10.1109/TCI.2024.3490381
URL:
ARXIVID:
PMID:

Note: article, openaccess, model-based

Abstract: Magnetic particle imaging is a tracer-based tomographic imaging technique that allows the concentration of magnetic nanoparticles to be determined with high spatio-temporal resolution. To reconstruct an image of the tracer concentration, the magnetization dynamics of the particles must be accurately modeled. A popular ensemble model is based on solving the Fokker-Plank equation, taking into account either Brownian or Néel dynamics. The disadvantage of this model is that it is computationally expensive due to an underlying stiff differential equation. A simplified model is the equilibrium model, which can be evaluated directly but in most relevant cases it suffers from a non-negligible modeling error. In the present work, we investigate an extended version of the equilibrium model that can account for particle anisotropy. We show that this model can be expressed as a series of Bessel functions, which can be truncated based on a predefined accuracy, leading to very short computation times, which are about three orders of magnitude lower than equivalent Fokker-Planck computation times. We investigate the accuracy of the model for 2D Lissajous magnetic particle imaging sequences and show that the difference between the Fokker-Planck and the equilibrium model with anisotropy is sufficiently small so that the latter model can be used for image reconstruction on experimental data with only marginal loss of image quality, even compared to a system matrix-based reconstruction.